THE LUCKY 13, Part 1 – The Movie Morlocks Pick Their Favorite Scary Movies The Wimp List by MoiraI am proud to be a wimp. I sleep with the light on, and like it that way. My list of favorite movies for Halloween may be a bit odd. I don’t like explicit gore or violence but I do like a good chill, and something to amuse as well as make me think just a little. So don’t look for anything that will positively make you wince here, though I hope that it might bring a smile of recognition:
1.) Kongo (1932):
Walter Huston recreates his chilling 1926 Broadway performance as King ‘Deadlegs’ Flint , a man whose crippled body is nothing when compared with the grotesque form that his soul has taken as he tries to revenge himself on a man he believes has thwarted his love. A remarkably depraved film, that fascinates and repels simultaneously as it explores several dark corners of the human heart, as well as committing every politically incorrect sin you can probably think of in this pre-code descent into lower depths. This movie is probably closer to what Joseph Conrad had in mind when he wrote about Kurtz murmuring “The horror, the horror” in The Heart of Darkness than any subsequent attempts to translate that story to film. Though some will prefer the silent Lon Chaney version, West of Zanzibar (1928), for me, a wallow in sin with the talented Mr. Huston is quite enough for this viewer!
5.) The Man Who Laughs(1928):
I like to imagine Curt Siodmak, who wrote this delightful yet powerful claptrap, dropping by at the house of his far more successful brother, director Robert Siodmak, in LA around the time when this movie was released. I hope that Curt, who seems to have had a nice sense of humor and irony, could enjoy, for once, a feeling of having achieved something that his prodigously talented brother never quite managed: the creation of an iconic figure in the Wolf Man aka Larry Talbot (played beautifully by Lon Chaney, Jr.) who would live to this day as a figure of pity and fear. While you could drive several Mack Trucks through the holes in this movie’s plot, (for example, the unlikely genetic link between darling, wee and very British character actor Claude Rains as the Wolf Man’s Dad & the hulking, very American Chaney as Junior), the cast, including Bela Lugosi, Warren William, Evelyn Ankers, and Patric Knowles mills about in the fog and enthusiastically brings this Halloween tale to life.
13 HORRORS – CUBED (Keelsetter’s List) 1. BAD DATES: Audition, Misery, Final Destination. A date looking for a future-wife, an unexpected date with a fan, a date with death. All have painful results. 2. CRITTERS BIG-TO-SMALL: Jaws, Arachnophobia, Cabin Fever. Yeah, yeah, I know, I now. What about The Birds? Look, it’s a great film, but I live with two cats and I’m not afraid of birds. Now, sharks, spiders, and germs? Those still keep me out of the water, out of my crawlspace, and washing my hands regularly. 3. CAR PROBLEMS: The Hitcher, Joy Ride, Wrong Turn. These films are enough to make one want to buy a Hummer – if not for the fact that those gas-guzzling, earth-destroying, street-hogging monsters are even scarier than killer drifters, truckers, or backwood mutants. 4. NEW ENGLAND SMALL TOWNS: Let’s Scare Jessica to Death, The Other, Salem’s Lot. There’s just something not quite right out here, maybe it’s the locals, or that hidden pitchfork in the haystack, or maybe it’s the vampires. Any way you poke, dice, or slice it, the people around here are clearly a few pickles short of a full barrel (and, for God’s Sake! Don’t look in the barrel!) 5. EXTRA-TERRESTRIALS IN SPACE: Alien, Aliens, Pitch Black. Even though the first alien was alone, he was scarier to me than a planet full of them. Especially without the military there to help Ripley. But Cameron’s follow-up gave me plenty of creepy-crawly feelings thanks to more face-hugger scenes. And, speaking of creepy crawlies, Pitch Black made me feel like I was handcuffed to a moist mattress full of bedbugs, and I loved that crash-landing scene at the beginning. 6. EXTRA-TERRESTRIALS ON EARTH: Quatermass and the Pit, Invasion of the Body Snatchers (’78), John Carpenter’s The Thing. What these all have in common are: people going nuts. Sure, the original Body Snatchers should be in here too, but something about Donald Sutherland’s scream at the end of the remake genuinely freaked me out more than Kevin McCarthy’s rant as he tries to outrun the pod mob (plus, McCarthy gets to do it again in the remake – so it’s a twofer). 7. DOCTORS WHO NEED TO REVISIT THEIR HIPPOCRATIC OATHS: The Re-Animator, Dead Ringers, The Dentist. At first I was going to go for sexual horrors and toss in Teeth instead of The Dentist, especially since the former is better than the latter, but even Bill Murray would have thought twice about visiting Brian Yuzna’s guy. (And we get another twofer here with Stuart Gordon helming The Re-Animator and co-writing The Dentist). 8. DEMONIC POSSESSIONS: The Exorcist, Evil Dead II, The Shining. The first one still fascinates me insofar as it served as a recruitment poster for the church (gotta believe in God if you’re going to believe in the Devil), the second one genuinely creeped me despite serving as a recruitment poster for the Three Stooges, and the third is an obvious masterpiece that’s also a recruitment poster for A.A. 9. BOOGEY MEN: Halloween, Friday the 13th, Jeepers Creepers. It doesn’t matter if he wears a Capt. Kirk mask, a hockey-mask, or a hat, he’s death incarnate, and he’s coming to getcha. Freddy Kreuger fits the bill too, but there was something about the first half of Jeepers Creepers that scared me more – probably that creepy old truck he rattled around in (not as scary as a Hummer, but it was still clearly in violation of any emission standards). 10. SLASHERS: Twitch of the Death Nerve, Last House on the Left, Scream. The first is artfully done, the second one cashes in on cinema-verite and some art-house cred by being loosely based on Ingmar Bergman’s The Virgin Spring. I debated replacing this with Deep Red, but was seduced by another twofer (via Wes Craven) since Scream brings the horror genre full circle by jump-starting the genre with a sleek bit of self-referential business and black humor. 11. SURREAL TRANSMOGRIFICATIONS: Eraserhead, Videodrome, Tetsuo. These give way to nightmarish visions that bypass the Super-Ego, the Ego, and go straight into the twisted psyche of the Id. 12. ZOMBIES: Night of the Living Dead, Dawn of the Dead, Return of the Living Dead. Call me old-fashioned, but I still like my zombies slow. It gives them more heft as a metaphor for overpopulation. You think you can outrun the problems, but they have a way of creeping up on you. When I was born the human population on Earth was three billion and something. That number has now more than doubled and is approaching seven billion. (On the plus side, there are now twice as many shopping malls to hide in.) 13. ED GEIN: Psycho, The Texas Chain Saw Massacre, Silence of the Lambs. I’m compelled to give this unlucky spot to a true and American original. A bit weird to think that a nutcase in Wisconsin with mommy-issues would give voice to three all-time great horror films (not to mention a slew of others), but his horrifying story is the thing that campfire stories are made of. The thought of a man killing women who resembled his mother, skinning them, and then wearing those skins around a kitchen full of other body parts is still hard to imagine, no matter how many movies have tried. MEDUSA’S Horror Picks To get back in touch with your inner child, here are some from my childhood: The Hypnotic Eye – because a woman burns her own face up, under Jacques Bergerac’s influence! Ouch!! Frankenstein’s Daughter – Not only do we get monsters in swimsuits, but a horribly deformed real monster in bandages!
Mr. Sardonicus – Because he is scary-looking, mean as can be, and utterly doomed!
House on Haunted Hill – Great skeletons and self-propelled ropes snaking around a lady… The Brain That Wouldn’t Die – Virginia Leith’s head in a pan! Scary Monster Behind the Door! Cheap but Effective! Invasion of the Body Snatchers – Poor Kevin McCarthy and those pods! Unsettling! And here are some from later years: Wrong Turn – Eliza Dushku and company kick backwoods deformed family’s asses…or try to, anyway. Jeepers Creepers – Scary winged scarecrow come to live…terrorizes kids on dark streets. Spooky! Slither – 2006 – Great alien invasion movie with horrible slimy things and poor Michael Rooker turning into a goopy mess! The Rapture – not conventional horror, but eerie and completely disturbing about the end of the world, ala the Bible. Poltergeist – Kind of flashy but still scary and very real world haunting stuff. Dawn of the Dead – 2004, with Sarah Polley. She is brave, the monsters are unrelenting! The Exorcist -Was intensely involving, horrific, real-life setting, always good combining religion with horror! Check back for Part 2 of “The Movie Morlocks Pick Their Favorite Scary Movies” later today! 11 Responses THE LUCKY 13, Part 1 – The Movie Morlocks Pick Their Favorite Scary Movies
Thank you for a splendid list. I am happy to say I have seen at least half of them. P.S. my friends say I am a dead ringer for Michael Redgrave! Jeff: so nice to see someone else appreciates walter huston in kongo… as a movie buff I never new this film existed until TNT first broadcasted it in the 1980′s… everyone I have introduced this film to found it to be really facinating… & we are now trying to fabricate a stage version of this film w/ the chaney elements in addition, here at Disney animal kingdom.. a big production.. w/ jungle scenery readily available here in florida… if we can make this work this production will really be something to see… so thanks for the article.. you really made my halloween complete !!!! Jan in the pan! I cannot help but love that poster for “Brain that Wouldn’t Die”. I just saw “Dead of Night” last night on TCM, it was terrific. I absolutely adored the ending, and Redgrave’s performance is still giving me goosebumps. “The Haunting” is one of my favorite films, as is “Quatermass and the Pit”. QatP is sadly out of print in the U.S. and, strangely enough, it’s cheaper to buy a region-free DVD player and get the U.K. version than to get a U.S. copy nowadays. People are selling their copies for US$100. That’s if you don’t stumble across a DVD copy of it in a bargain bin somewhere, of course. In short, movies make us insane. To Mr. Sardonicus, KONGO is Moira’s pick but it’s a must-see for those unfamiliar with it. I actually like the Lon Chaney version, West of Zanzibar (1928), directed by Tod Browning, even better. But both are, “remarkably depraved” (as Moira would say). Moira We have similar tastes in being scared, if that makes sense. I almost put THE WOLF MAN on my list; I should have put THE LADY IN WHITE but I didn’t think of it;and I included PICNIC AT HANGING ROCK by Peter Weir, who did THE LAST WAVE. Very cool. If that portrait from The Picture of Dorian Gray scares you, then you probably should never go to the Art Institute of Chicago, where it hangs today. I’m no wimp (I love horror films, but almost none of them actually scare me), but my list would probably contain a few of moira’s wimpy titles: Kongo and The Uninvited for sure. Except for Willem Dafoe, however, I couldn’t stand Shadow of the Vampire. The idea was great, but the execution was quite lacking I thought. Medusa: Nice to see a mention of Wrong Turn, one of the few recent horror films that made me jump. Very intense. Hey, Mr. Sardonicus & Jeff: Yikes, Keelsetter: Oh, Medusa: Hey Suzi: Hi Brainchild: Hi YancySkancy: One other “Behind the Scenes with the Monster Maker” movie that I almost chose was Bill Condon’s Gods and Monsters (1998) with its brilliant work by Ian McKellen as director James Whale in retirement and Brendan Fraser as a sweet-spirited monster-yard man. It blends so many of the poetic and disturbing elements of Whale‘s movies beautifully. It also made me want to see all of Whale’s films. So far, I haven’t been able to track down The Road Back or Journey’s End, but it has been enriching seeing more than Frankenstein, The Invisible Man and Bride of Frankenstein–even though they are movies that continue to show me something new at each viewing. Quite sometime ago I requested a British film to be shown on TCM—Dead of Night. I researched that it had not been played on TCM before my request & I am quite pleased that so many others have enjoyed it. The original, Haunting, The Uninvited & Dead of Night all of which I watched as a kid back in the fifties & although I’ve seen other eerie films, just those three keep me up at night after viewing. Thank you for your comments regarding LADY IN WHITE. Here is a link to my latest work: http://www.frankiegoestotuscany.com Frank La Loggia Leave a Reply |
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It’s hard out there for a wimp.